JohnCoffey wrote:
Auld Lang Sheep wrote:
AVIVO is a process in which the decoding of movie files is offloaded on to the GPU, rather than a VIVO solution. It doesn't mean your card has a video in socket (although it may, still, it's just two different things.)
I read the ATI manual and apparently it stands for Audio video in Video out.
From Wikipedia :
AVIVO
AVIVO is a hardware feature designed to offload video decoding, encoding, and post-processing from a computer's CPU hardware to ATI's GPU hardware series, first introduced with the ATI R520-based line of GPUs. The platform is designed to enhance the quality and flexibility of ATI's current video capabilities. The platform involves hardware video decoding, encoding, and a variety of tools to aid in the process. AVIVO compatible GPUs have lower CPU usage when a player and decoder software that support AVIVO is used.
However, the GPU itself does not convert TV signals to video signals usable on computer monitors. Such jobs are done by Rage Theater or Theater 200 on reference video card designs, and the availability of such decoder depends on the decision of implementation of the manufacturer and market positions of various models.
From ATI :
Avivo™ High-End Video and Display
* Rediscover your photos and video and experience over 1 billion colors - exclusive to ATI graphics cards
* Remarkable, high-quality HD video playback
* Ready your multimedia system for HDCP1 and watch high-definition content
Believe me Sir, hardware is my area of expertise, and AVIVO doesn't mean you have video capture ability (although as I pointed out it doesn't mean you don't have it either). I've owned quite a few AVIVO-enabled cards and they couldn't do capture.